>sudo_

sudo stands for Substitute User DO or SuperUser DO.
It's a powerful command that you must handle with great care.
If you are a member of the proper group and have permission to do sudo
commands than you can execute commands as if you were the root user.
Say you're an administrator in the users folder, and you would like to see a subfolder
inside the home folder from another user named Nate, you may attempt to use the command:
ls -lr Nate, but you will come by a whole bunch of permissions denied messages,
this happens because even-though you're an administrator, you don't
have the rights or permissions to get inside of Nate's home folder and look
inside those subfolders.
That's where the sudo command comes in:

Now, Instead of the denied messages now you actually get a listing of all those subfolders
in Nate's home folder. So you can execute commands temporarily as if you were the root user,
which can do absolutely anything on the system. It's is very powerful to troubleshooting
or fixing problems.

Flags

-s: If you're going to execute a lot of commands with sudo, you can go inside
the root shell using the flag -s,
so that you won't need to keep typing sudo over and over again.
By typing whoami command after typing sudo -s should return you "root".
This is what it look likes:

sudo -s
Password: (type the local administrator password)
whoami
root

Remember, with great power comes great responsibility, be careful with sudo commands.